Who is your greatest Change Maker? By: John B.
McDonald
Let's start with a few questions:
Why is Jesus
Christ important?
How does a
person enter into a dynamic relationship with God?
What's your
greatest purpose or objective once you become a follower of Jesus?
These are
questions we will briefly explore by unpacking three important terms.
The first of
these terms is 'incarnation'. What does that mean?
Incarnation (God becomes a Human)
Incarnation refers to the historical event when God “en-fleshed”
himself and became a human. In this act God revealed himself to us and
identified with us.
John’s
eye-witness account confirms this revelation
of God in Jesus. He writes,
“In the
beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. …
And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his
glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth. … grace and truth came through Jesus Christ” (John 1:1, 14,
17).
Paul also
writes of the effects of the incarnation in these terms (Colossians 1:19):
In Christ
Jesus “all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell.”
Here's an
illustration.
My thoughts
are invisible to others. When I wrap my invisible thoughts in words, and then
write or speak them, my thoughts are made known to others.
This is a
small picture of the incarnation when the invisible God ‘wrapped’ himself in
humanity and lived among us as Jesus Christ.
In the
incarnation, God identified with humanity, by becoming a human.
As Jesus,
deity experienced humanity fully without sinning. This included all of life:
conception and birth, joy and sorrow, hunger and weariness, pain and death.
“Since
therefore the children [i.e., humans] share in flesh and blood, he himself
[i.e., Jesus] likewise partook of the same things that through death he might
destroy the one who has the power of death, that is the devil, and deliver all
those who through fear of death were subject to lifelong slavery” (Hebrews
2:14-15).
God has
revealed himself, and has identified with us, as Jesus. There is so much more
that could be said that the apostle John writes, “there
are many other things that Jesus did. Were every one
of them to be written, I suppose that the world itself could not contain the
books that would be written” (John 21:25).
How does a person become a follower of Jesus? That brings us to the second concept.
Conversion (A Human Becomes ‘In Christ’) Conversion
is not a popular word in a religious context. And yet, it is a common enough
word in daily conversation.
We speak
about the conversion of a touch down by a field goal; of American dollars
into another currency; of US gallons into liters.
A wedding is a conversion. In a moment a man and a woman enter into a life-long covenant of
companionship and are converted from two single individuals into one married
couple. From that event onward their lives are changed and become radically
different.
The act of
believing in, or trusting in, or receiving Jesus Christ is an event of
conversion. From that event onward a person is changed from being alienated or
separated from God to being ‘in Christ’.
The event
of conversion creates a new
identity: American dollars become Canadian dollars; an unmarried woman
becomes a wife; a person alienated from God becomes ‘in Christ’.
Is an event
of conversion the end of the ‘story’ for a person who is ‘in Christ’? Is that
all, or is their more that happens? This brings us to the third concept.
Transformation (A follower of Jesus
becomes ‘Like Jesus’)
Recently I enjoyed lunch with an accomplished professional who had
experienced the event of becoming ‘in Christ’.
I asked him
what God’s purpose was for him as a follower of Jesus. He replied that he was
to become more like Jesus Christ.
This is
the process of transformation –
becoming more and more ‘like Jesus’.
In the past, God (the Father), predetermined that everyone ‘in Christ’
will be “conformed to the image of his Son” (Romans 8:28-29).
In the
future, this process will be realized fully at the physical return of Jesus
Christ (1 John 3:1-3).
In the
present, ‘in-between-time’, God desires that those 'in Christ' cooperate with
his Spirit. The Spirit is working in the present to transform each follower of
Jesus “into the same image [i.e., of Jesus Christ] from one degree of glory to
another” (2 Corinthians 3:18).
One of the
realities of this transforming process is that our personal identity is being changed to become more and
more like the identity of Jesus Christ. This results in attitudes, words, and
actions resonating more and more with Jesus Christ.
Conclusion
Conversion
is the event at which a person becomes 'in Christ'. Transformation is the
life-long process by which a person 'in Christ' becomes more 'like Christ'.
In 2 Cornthians 3:18, the words "being transformed"
translate the Greek word, metamorphosis. This is the same word we use for
the process that transforms a caterpillar into a butterfly. It's an amazing
metaphor for those 'in Christ' who are becoming more 'like Christ'.